Serena rallies to earn spot in Australian Open quarterfinals

Top-seeded Serena Williams had to go the distance to fend off Garbine Muguruza in three sets in their fourth-round match Monday.

Photo: Bernat Armangue, STF

MELBOURNE, Australia - Serena Williams avenged her heaviest Grand Slam defeat with a comeback 2-6, 6-3, 6-2 victory over Garbine Muguruza on Monday to reach the Australian Open quarterfinals.

The top-ranked Williams was pushed all the way by No. 24-seeded Muguruza, who matched her in the heavy-hitting rallies and had conceded only four games to her in a second-round upset last year at the French Open.

Five-time Australian Open winner Williams next faces Dominika Cibulkova, who reproduced the kind of tennis that helped her reach the final here last year as she beat two-time champion Victoria Azarenka 6-2, 3-6, 6-3.

On the men's side, defending champion Stan Wawrinka beat Guillermo Garcia-Lopez 7-6 (2), 6-4, 4-6, 7-6 (8) to move into the men's quarterfinals, where he will play either No. 5 Kei Nishikori or No. 9 David Ferrer.

Williams appeared to be laboring at times and had a serious cough. She struggled with her serve in the first set, winning only one of a dozen points on her second serve as the 21-year-old Spaniard went on the attack. She couldn't convert her six break-point chances, while Muguruza broke her twice.

Williams has not advanced past the quarterfinals at Melbourne Park since winning her last title here in 2010.

There was a lot to distract her. In the first set, six planes were doing coordinated loops and tricks in the sky over Rod Laver Arena, as part of the national day celebrations in downtown Melbourne. She had difficulty breathing at times and had a bout of heaving coughing at a changeover.

"I've been a little sick the past couple of days, but I just love it here," Williams said, when asked if she had swallowed a fly. "When I got down, I was thinking, ''What can I do now? Whatever happens, I thought, I've won this five times."

She gradually picked up power in the second set, broke for a 5-3 lead and then fired three aces and a service winner to level the match at 1-1, screaming as she pumped her fist.

After missing break points on Muguruza's serve in the opening game of the third, Williams saved six break points and needed almost 13 minutes to hold.

Her confidence up, Williams broke for a 3-2 lead and dominated the rest of the match.

She will need every bit of confidence against the 5-3 Cibulkova, who pounded 44 winners and broke former No. 1-ranked Azarenka's serve seven times to reach a Grand Slam quarterfinal for the sixth time.

The 10th-ranked Cibulkova lost the final here last year to the now-retired Li Na and is back in that kind of form.

"I just walked onto the court, and all great memories came to my mind," she said, reflecting on how her run last year is inspiring her at the Australian Open, "I thought 'I'm a great player and I can do it.' "

"As you can see, I'm not the tallest player on tour, I need to have something extra if I want to beat these top players," she said of her heavy ground strokes. "This is my energy on the court, this is how I play."

Azarenka, unseeded this year after her ranking slipped into the 40s following an injury-interrupted 2014, won the Australian title in 2012 and '13 and reached the quarterfinals last year. She opened the tournament with a win over 2013 semifinalist Sloane Stephens and then defeated No. 8-seeded Caroline Wozniacki - the U.S. Open finalist last year and former No. 1 - and No. 25 Barbora Zahlavov Stryova.

In a match that ended late Sunday, Nick Kyrgios came back from two sets down and saved a match point to beat Andreas Seppi 5-7, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (5), 8-6, becoming the first Aussie to reach the last eight in the men's draw since 2005 and the first male teenager since Roger Federer to reach two Grand Slam quarterfinals.

His first words to a packed Hisense Arena, where the crowd yelled and screamed like football fans: "Thanks, mate. Feels so good."

Seppi beat Federer in the third round - the 17-time Grand Slam winner's earliest exit in Melbourne in 14 years - and was on course to reach the quarterfinals for the first time in 40 majors.

But the 19-year-old Kyrgios had experience in coming back from 0-2 - he did that at Wimbledon, where he also upset then No. 1-ranked Rafael Nadal en route to the quarters.

"I know that he had a lot of confidence, obviously, beating Roger," Kyrgios said. "Drawing all my experience from Wimbledon, coming back from two sets down, I knew I had the legs to do that."

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